Berry Gordy Motown musical set for Broadway - BBC News Berry Gordy Motown musical set for Broadway - BBC News
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Berry Gordy Motown musical set for Broadway - BBC News

Berry Gordy Motown musical set for Broadway - BBC News

A musical based on the life of Motown Records founder Berry Gordy is set to open on Broadway next year.

Producers said Motown the Musical would feature songs made famous by artists who found fame with the label including Stevie Wonder and the Jackson Five.

Gordy will write and co-produce the show, which will open next spring.

The 82-year-old mogul said the production was "a challenging and exciting opportunity to tell my story and share the magic of Motown".

"I can't wait to feel that same Motown spirit come alive on stage every night," he added.

Producers described the show as "a gripping story about the proteges and stars of a uniquely talented musical family who, under Gordy's guidance, began as the Sound of Young America and went on to become some of the greatest superstars of all time".

Other songs to feature in the musical include those made famous by Diana Ross and the Supremes, Smokey Robinson, The Temptations and Marvin Gaye.

Producer Doug Morris said: "This is an amazing opportunity for everyone to experience the Motown phenomenon through the eyes of the man who lived it."

Casting for the show has yet to be announced.



US recovery varies greatly by state, county, city - Reuters

June 27 | Wed Jun 27, 2012 5:29pm EDT

June 27 (Reuters) - In a twist on the old aphorism about real estate, the three most important factors for the current U.S. economic recovery seem to be location, location, location.

Growth right now is "extremely concentrated" in a few states, said Chris Mauro head of U.S. Municipal Research Strategy at RBC Capital Markets, adding that there has been "a general stagnation, with the exception of some of the resource-rich states."

Three reports released on Wednesday show wide variations in the rebound from the 2007-09 economic recession, both at the state and local levels.

Unlike past downturns, the recession spared only a few states, largely because it hit nearly every economic sector and the states' economies are interconnected, said Arturo Perez at the National Conference of State Legislatures.

"When things started going south, no state was able to ward off the bad stuff that was happening," he said.

But the states did not enter recession at the same time and some suffered less than others.

"They're not in lockstep going into a recession. They're not going to be in lockstep coming out," he said, pointing to Kansas, which did not have the same run-up in housing prices - and therefore not as steep a drop - as Nevada.

Now, energy-rich states are sprinting toward prosperity, helped by a surge in natural gas, while others are closer to shuffling back to stability. That is creating disparities on the personal level and the political one - some states are considering cutting taxes while others are having to close budget gaps.

In the first quarter of 2012, personal income rose in 47 of the 50 states, according to a Commerce Department report released on Wednesday that found state personal income growth was 0.8 percent in the first quarter, compared with 0.4 percent in the fourth quarter of 2011.

Personal income declined 0.3 percent in Mississippi and 0.1 percent in Kansas and was unchanged in Oklahoma in the first three months of 2012. On the other end of the spectrum, income grew the most in commodity-abundant North Dakota, 2.3 percent from the quarter before.

Total earnings grew 0.81 percent in the first quarter, according to the report. They ranged from dropping 0.34 percent in Oklahoma to rising 1.12 percent in Washington.

Earlier this month, the US. Census reported that economic growth was scattered across the states in 2011. A boom in mining helped North Dakota's economy grow 7.6 percent, while in six states the economies shrank.

PATCHINESS AT LOCAL LEVEL

Cities and counties also did not enter recession in a uniform way. Some were immediately affected by the housing crisis, while others did not see the downturn until there were massive problems on the national level, said Jackie Byers, a researcher at the National Association of Counties.

In its quarterly review of metropolitan economies released on Wednesday, the Brookings Institution described the wide variations in recovery as "significant patchiness."

Brookings found that from January to March, employment growth accelerated across most of the nation's 100 largest metro areas, while output growth weakened. Unemployment rates fell in more than half of all metropolitan areas, but remained above 6 percent in almost all of them.

Housing prices hit new lows in 73 of the 100 largest metropolitan areas, which typically include a major city and its surrounding suburbs, after showing signs of growth in previous quarters, Brookings found.

"Until there's a recovery across all sectors you won't see a smoothing out in the economy," said Alec Friedhoff, a research analyst for the group's Metropolitan Policy Program.

Brookings found that, yet again, cities in Texas are having the fastest recoveries, largely because they experienced mild recessions and are now benefiting from a boom in natural gas.

Cities in California's Central Valley, such as financially tottering Stockton and other western metropolitan areas such as Colorado Springs, Las Vegas and Tucson continue to lag.

U.S. Labor Department data also released on Wednesday showed the patchiness likely persisted past March.

In May, employment increased in 266 metropolitan areas from a year before, decreased in 101 areas and had no change in five areas. The jobless rate was at least 10 percent in 45 areas, but was lower than 7 percent in 140.


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